Here's one from a 9-hole muni, the triple-tiered green at the 104 yard par 3 8th hole at Robert A. Black Golf Course is a lot of fun to play. Leaving your tee shot on a tier where the pin isn't makes for some exciting putts.
I've played this hole a bunch over the years. It's a ton of fun for the children, women and super-super seniors who hit driver 100 yards.
Nice to see one of my first green designs get some love here. That was the first project I was put in charge of by Killian and Nugent less than a year in from my start date. I recall getting quite a lot of freedom, although the three tier green was one of their standards, a la, 13 at Kemper Lakes (if that still hasn't been remodeled.)
2 used to have a gravel lake, because the water table was too high to have a real one, and it was thought it would speed play. Don't recall much else at the moment, need to stop by. I will say 8 was open when we built it. All those trees were planted, as actually, we were design sub consultants to a landscape architecture firm designing the park.
One great story, if you will. This was the old Edgewater course, home of Chick Evans. I got to pick him up from his small apartment along the first fairway for the grand opening, one of my great memories. The combo living room/dinette/galley kitchen had a golf net and astroturf tee and he was hitting balls to warm up. He was still pretty sharp.
When we got there, he was looking for a tree (it is or was a mature willow near the new 6 green) that he claimed he had put a golf ball a year down the hollow opening in remembrance of his mother's birthday, as she got him started. Given we totally rerouted the course, not only to nine holes but changing froe E-W to N-S, I doubted we had saved it, but we found it. A construction guy reached down and sure enough, pulled out dozens of old Spalding Dot golf balls from long ago.